Example sentences of "[vb infin] for [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | He thought that architects should design for the new life style which was to arise , and design " for service " , making economical and logical use of space and using mechanical devices in order to provide comfort and to make housework pleasant by lightening the time and effort spent doing it ( 1934 p 32 ) . |
2 | They are well understood , cheap to collect and very difficult to evade … rates should remain for the foreseeable future the main source of local revenue for local government ’ ( DOE/Welsh Office 1983a : 14 ) . |
3 | Although a good deal of success has been achieved with regard to mapping vegetation ( Hathout , 1980 ) , there are still problems with resolution and cloud cover ( Allan , 1980 ) and although these are gradually being resolved by radar , the problem of more detailed and fine-grained interpretation will remain for the foreseeable future ( Deane , 1980 ) . |
4 | Two years later , however , in a further White Paper , Rates : Proposals for Rate Limitation and Reform of the Rating System ( 1983 ) , the government recognized that wide consultation had failed to find any consensus for an alternative local tax , and conceded that rates should remain for the foreseeable future as the main source of local government revenue . |
5 | But , that niggle aside , London is where he will remain for the foreseeable future . |
6 | Although microfilm will remain for the foreseeable future by far the more acceptable medium of preservation , as a versatile aid to the scholar the computer image is far in advance . |
7 | So a new calliper how much do you think for a new calliper ? |
8 | When the Ottoman empire declared war on a foreign state its unfortunate representative in Constantinople was very often immediately thrown into the Seven Towers prison there , where he might stay for a considerable time . |
9 | ‘ Alex , ’ said the producer , ‘ could you just stay for a quick word ? ’ |
10 | Well , people come on a day to day basis , like a working environment , right ? er Each individual will stay for a different length of time , it could be weeks , months , even years . |
11 | Staying would also be impossible in the long run but that young man would let me stay for a little while — until the restaurant closed , anyway . |
12 | Pam , 63 , said : ‘ They used to come every summer for a couple of weeks and the rest of the year they would stay for the odd week . |
13 | The row could make for a strained atmosphere as Mr Major spends the Premier 's traditional weekend with the Queen . |
14 | Without doubt the two best Cup teams in the country have reached Twickenham this season and it should make for a superb final . |
15 | It is interesting to see the raw material of event transformed into poetry , though this does make for a certain degree of repetition . |
16 | It is interesting to see the raw material of event transformed into poetry , though this does make for a certain degree of repetition . |
17 | None of this means Shawcross should stop — the cause is too important — but it can make for a frustrating life . |
18 | Needless to say , this attitude did not make for a good marriage . |
19 | Either because he had the hump or because he thought it would make for a good show he started smashing the footlights one by one . |
20 | There are several splendid houses near Long Melford that would make for a gentle afternoon 's potter through the rooms and possessions of the rich of a few centuries ago . |
21 | In an era of fast food , subsistence incomes do n't make for a culinary culture . |
22 | Religious networks could make for a unified effort or become the vertebrae of different segments of reformers whose conflicts were expressed in organisational diversity and competition . |
23 | 50 races … solos and sidecars … should make for a thrilling showdown . |
24 | Moreover , constitutional lawyers may write about " old " Parliaments being able to bind and limit a " new " Parliament , and may suggest that a " new judicial attitude " ( whereby judges no longer accept that they are subordinate to Parliament ) would make for a fresh start so that " the doctrine that no Parliament can bind its successors becomes ancient history " , but these tricky legal formulations do not alter the fact that constitution-making occurs in the context of a political reality which limits what is feasible , acceptable , and enforceable . |
25 | So I thought an illustration of Mark 's later playing , as demonstrated on Dire Straits latest album ‘ On Every Street ’ , might make for a welcome change . |
26 | I would make for the Federal Republic . ’ |
27 | It might be part of her job to parade through the ballroom but she surely did n't want to have to prattle facts and figures for what she was wearing now , a skin-tight concoction of bugle heads and sequins that probably cost more than she 'd make for the entire year . |
28 | He says : ‘ Small budgets , apologetic councils strapped for cash , and a complex social and sometimes ethnic mix of young customers and their parents do n't make for an easy life . ’ |
29 | But it did n't always make for an easy life . |
30 | Their success at the game did not make for an easy relationship , though . |